Here are the Yankees’ options with Frazier, whom reporters would have asked what he could do to get better if he only didn’t duck them after the game, instead choosing to let his manager and teammates answer for him.

1.) DH him: A little credit to Frazier: He’s been putting in the work. After several embarrassing miscues early in the season led to manager Aaron Boone consistently sitting him in favor of better defenders in late innings with the Yankees leading, Frazier has spent a bunch of recent pregames doing extra drills with outfield instructor Reggie Willits. Aaron Judge has participated in the drills, too. So, the Yankees could keep his bat — which he’s proved to be dangerous against big-league pitching — in the lineup at DH for the next few games while he continues his work with Willits and the Yankees feel he’s made strides.

2.) Run him back out there: Frazier’s bat was always going to carry him, talent evaluators thought even when Frazier was a first-round pick. That sentiment has hardly changed but few envisioned Frazier’s problems snowballing like this. The Yankees could fight fire with fire, though. Rather than shying from Frazier, they could go all in on him. That could show Frazier the team remains confident in him and could help him come around faster. Not saying it would work that way. But it could.

3.) Demote him: Frazier’s defense will only get better if he plays every day. Plenty of at-bats to be had at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. But here’s the thing: The Yankees could still use his bat and they probably wouldn’t hate him continuing to impress at the plate with the July 31 trade deadline coming up.

4.) Trade him: Unlikely to happen immediately, considering Frazier’s stock had to have taken a hit Sunday night.